With both teams shorn of talent due to State of Origin duties and injuries, it was the Storm who came home the strongest, scoring two tries in the final 10 minutes to steal the victory.

Young stars Ben Hampton and Kurt Mann scored the four-pointers to halt the Storm's two-game losing streak and show there is life in Melbourne without Origin stars Billy Slater, Cameron Smith, Ryan Hoffman and injured halfback Cooper Cronk.

The victory, in front of the second-lowest NRL crowd of the season of 6,497, is the Storm's first win without inspirational skipper Smith in eight attempts.

Already without regular half-back Albert Kelly, the Titans suffered an early setback when his replacement Beau Henry limped out of the match with a knee injury.

Queensland Origin squad member Will Chambers was released by the Maroons to play for the Storm and scored a double to put the visitors ahead 14-12 in the second half.

The Titans responded with James Roberts scoring on his debut for the club, before Melbourne's late double made Kevin Gordon's spectacular second academic.

Chambers received attention after suffering a knee injury with 15 minutes to go in the game but recovered to see out the match, easing any concerns Queensland coach Mal Meninga might have had in case the centre is required for Wednesday's must-win clash with New South Wales.

The loss is the Titans' fifth in a row and they will be itching to get back to the winner's circle with another home game against St George Illawarra on Sunday.

McLean makes return

Melbourne forward Jordan McLean made his first NRL appearance since being banned for a dangerous throw on Newcastle's Alex McKinnon, coming off the bench to face the Titans.

The 22-year-old received a seven-game ban in April following the incident with McKinnon which left the Knights' youngster with a serious spinal injury.

McLean made his return to rugby league earlier this month in the NSW Cup following the expiration of his ban.

Free trade is the oldest argument in federal politics and the issue that literally defined the federation era but opposition exists to the TPP, courtesy of the Investor-State Dispute Resolutions clause.